Lenzing, a leading corporation in the man-made fibre production is launching a new Tencel fibre. Tencel already known in the market as an eco-friendly fibre is now achieving another key milestone by creating a highly sustainable fibre from cotton waste fabrics to help drive circular economy solutions in the textile industry.
The new generation of lyocell fibres is an ecological wood-based fibre, combining cotton waste recycling with Lenzing’s pioneering closed-loop Tencel production on a commercial scale. The company said that it is the first manufacturer to offer the new cellulose fibres incorporating recycled materials on a commercial scale.
The manufacturer said that Tencel made from cotton waste fabrics will further build Lenzing’s reputation as a leader in the field of environmental technology and will push new solutions in the textile industry towards circular economy by recycling waste.
For Lenzing, developing circular business models in the fashion industry ensures the decoupling of business growth from pressure on ecological resource consumption. It reduces the need to extract additional virgin resources from nature, and reduces the net impact on ecological resources, commented Robert van de Kerkhof, CCO of Lenzing.
Its new Tencel fibre introduces an innovative approach to marketing. The fibre is not sold directly to yarn or fabric manufacturers. Instead, it will be exclusively offered to leading retailers and brands that in turn could produce their garment collections in the most sustainable way by engaging the right value chain partners. According to Lenzing, this should ensure close co-operation and transparency in the entire textile value chain.
A new type of identification procedure is employed to guarantee transparency for the Tencel fibre. This is said to allow Lenzing to assure retailers that the Tencel fibres in the garment are indeed the most eco-friendly wood-based fibres available.
At the moment, the fibre is being tested with selected brand manufacturers and retailers and is at the point of being introduced to the market.
Tencel has already been awarded the EU award for the most eco-friendly production process based on 99.7% closed loop circulation in the production and use of bio-energy.
According to the manufacturer, the latest next-generation Tencel fibre combines the best of two worlds – recycling cotton waste fabrics and using the most sustainable Tencel technology – to create an ecological wood-based fibre.
The recycling of cotton waste fabrics into virgin textile Tencel fibres aims to offer a practical solution to enable circular economy in the apparel industry.
Triarchy has teamed up with supermodel and climate advocate Amber Valletta to promote its exclusive Plastic-Free Stretch Denim collection.
To combat cracking, researchers have discovered an innovative solution that repurposes waste carpet fibers into concrete, significantly reducing cracking risks.
This week in Germany, the denim giant, Levi's, introduced the Levi’s Jeans Fit Guide, an innovative voice-driven tool powered by…
The MANTRA in Surat has partnered with NABL, a division of the Quality Council of India, to offer a specialized…
ReHubs, a European hub focused on textile-to-textile recycling, is teaming up with event organizer AMI to launch the Textiles Recycling…
The four-year ReBioCycle project seeks to advance recycling technologies for bioplastics such as PLA and PHA with €7.5 million in…